Virus
Guide

It seems like
each and every day I get an e-mail or two about the latest and
most deadly virus to date. Since there are thousands of viruses
out there, it would be impossible to watch out for all of them.
So, I'm going to give you some general virus guidelines that
you can use to help keep yourself from getting infected. It's
like that old saying, "Type code for a man and get his
program running for a day. Teach him C++ and get his programs
working for life".
Ok, maybe
that's not the *exact* way that one goes, but you get the idea.
What
is a virus anyway?

A virus is
an unwanted program that, in almost all cases, the user accidentally
installs onto his or her computer. Some are relatively harmless
and cause little, if any, damage. Some are much more hazardous
and can render the information on your computer's hard drive
useless. Most just like to try to share your information, crash
your computer, and spread themselves around.
So why do people
make viruses?
Well, some
(maybe most) do it just to see if they *can* do it. Some are
genuinely looking to cause havoc. Others, and these are the ones
to watch, are trying to get personal information from you. Many
of the viruses out there are used to send their creator information
from your computer via e-mail. Sure, there are more than just
those 3 reasons, but I believe those to be the primary ones.
A
day in the life of a virus

Since most
of the viruses that give people trouble tend to be in the form
of e-mail viruses, I'm going to give you the low down on how
most of these puppies work with our computer buddy, "Jim".
Let's say Jim
goes to work and checks his e-mail like he always does. He notices
an e-mail from someone he knows with an attachment. The e-mail
says something generic like "Hey, check out this attachment,
it's really cool".
In all likelihood,
there will be no signature (although there could be).
So, old Jim
clicks the little paperclip icon and runs the attachment. It
probably ends in ".exe" or ".zip".
Maybe he gets
a cute little display on his screen (the Happy99 virus gave the
user a fireworks display). Jim thinks "Hmm, that was cool" and
gets back to work, completely unaware that he has been infected.
Now the virus
goes to work. The first thing it will probably do is get into
his address book and send itself to everyone in it. When these
people get the e-mail virus, it looks like their friend Jim has
just sent them a cool little file to check out. Old Jim doesn't
have a clue that this has even transpired but now all his friends
are opening up this little file and infecting their own computers
(and sending it out to everyone in their address books). Do you
see how these things can infect millions of computers in a hurry?
Another route
the virus can take is to send a second e-mail with itself attached
to anyone you are sending a message to. For instance, say you
send Jim a message. Jim checks his e-mail and sees your message
plus another message from the virus that you didn't even know
you sent.
A quick way
to check and see if you are infected with this type of "piggy
back" virus is to send yourself an e-mail. If you get a
second e-mail with an attachment, you're infected (note - this
only works for viruses that spread themselves as described above).
Another way
these e-mail themselves is by choosing an address from your address
book as the "from" person (The Klez virus does this).
So, it looks like one of Jim's friends is sending out viruses
form their computer, but it's really coming from his machine.
Jim's friend
then gets lots of e-mail from people telling him that he's sending
out viruses! Of course, he's not, but Jim is. (In addition, Jim
may get an earful from this (now former) friend once he figures
out what happened!)
OK, I now what
you may be thinking. Maybe you have 500 people in your address
book and it seems like you would notice that there was an excessive
amount of e-mail going out when you send / receive.
Well, you may
with some viruses, but the smarter ones have an "SMTP" engine
built in. Simply put, they can send e-mail from your computer
without using your e-mail software or server. This is done is
the background and may seem like nothing more than a sluggish
internet connection.
Sneaky, aren't
they? That's how most e-mail viruses work.

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